@article{Duch2007,
author={Włodzisław Duch},
title={Experiments with Computational Creativity},
year={2007},
journal={Neural Information Processing, Letters and Reviews},
volume={11},
number={3},
annote={This paper describes a neurocognitive model inspired by the putative processes in the brain applied to the invention of novel words. The use three factors to creativity in this domain: knowledge of the statistical language properties, imagination constrained by this knowledge, and filtering of results that selects most
interesting novel words.}
}

@book{wordnet,
  added-at = {2007-10-30T23:31:40.000+0100},
  biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2c9addc264aa2b922971d3d6e6c068cae/stumme},
  editor = {Fellbaum, Christiane},
  interhash = {42daa1681607dd1d3f3234c605d84ec3},
  intrahash = {c9addc264aa2b922971d3d6e6c068cae},
  keywords = {WordNet wordnet},
  publisher = {MIT Press},
  timestamp = {2007-10-30T23:31:40.000+0100},
  title = {{WordNet: an electronic lexical database}},
  year = 1998,
  annote={A lexical database of English. Nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs are grouped into sets of cognitive synonyms (synsets), each expressing a distinct concept.}
}

@inproceedings{Veale2006,
 author = {Veale, Tony},
 title = {Tracking the Lexical Zeitgeist with WordNet and Wikipedia},
 booktitle = {Proceedings of the 17th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence},
 year = {2006},
 isbn = {1-58603-642-4},
 pages = {56--60},
 numpages = {5},
 url = {http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1567016.1567034},
 acmid = {1567034},
 publisher = {IOS Press},
 address = {Amsterdam, The Netherlands},
 annote = {This paper describes several schema used to determine the root words from composite head words in Wikipedia using links found within a Wikipedia article. For example, the headword "feminazi" is linked to the root words "feminist" and "Nazi".}
} 

@inproceedings{Mendes2004,
author={Mateus Mendes and Francisco C. Pereira and Amilcar Cardoso},
title={Creativity in Natural Language: Studying Lexical Relations},
booktitle={Proceedings of the Workshop on Language Resources for Linguistic Creativity, 4th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC)},
year={2004},
 address = {Lisbon},
annote={This paper describes Dupond, a system that tries to make sentences more creative by substituting new words without changing the meaning of the sentence. Dupond is part of a larger system and is meant to study how lexical relationships can be used to influence creativity in natural language.},

}

@inproceedings{Veale2004,
author={Nuno Seco and Tony Veale and Jer Hayes},
title={Concept Creation in Lexical Ontologies},
booktitle={Proceedings of the Workshop on Language Resources for Linguistic Creativity, 4th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC)},
year={2004},
address={Lisbon},
annote={This paper presents preliminary results on concept creation using WordNet. They focus on creating noun-noun compound words by identifying a \textit{Modifier Intersection Set}, or a set of words where the two concepts overlap.},
}

@article{Cook2010,
 author = {Cook, Paul and Stevenson, Suzanne},
 title = {Automatically identifying the source words of lexical blends in english},
 journal = {Computational Linguistics},
 issue_date = {March 2010},
 volume = {36},
 issue = {1},
 month = mar,
 year = {2010},
 issn = {0891-2017},
 pages = {129--149},
 numpages = {21},
 url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/coli.2010.36.1.36104},
 doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/coli.2010.36.1.36104},
 acmid = {1730928},
 publisher = {MIT Press},
 address = {Cambridge, MA, USA},
 annote={This paper addresses the issue of encountering novel words in natural language processing problems that have no lexical information. The authors describe a statistical model for inferring the source words from blended words such as cosmeceutical, which is a blend of cosmetic and pharmaceutical.}
} 

@article{Veale2000,
    author = {Tony Veale and Diarmuid O'Donoghue and Mark T. Keane},
    title = {Computation and Blending },
    year = {2000},
    journal={computational Linguistics},
    volume={11},
    number={3/4},
    pages={253--281},
    annote={This paper presents a formalized computational framework for concept blending. In concept blending, multiple concepts (or input spaces) are blended together in to a blend spaces using information that is common to both input spaces (the generic space) as well as selectively projecting relevant information from each input space. Additional constructor and work spaces are also defined. The framework is used to create metaphors of movies.},
}

@conference {Veale2006b,
	title = {Exploring linguistic creativity via predictive lexicology},
	booktitle = {The Third Joint Workshop on Computational Creativity},
	series = {ECAI 2006},
	year = {2006},
	publisher = {Universita di Trento},
	organization = {Universita di Trento},
	address = {Trento, Italy},
	keywords = {computational, creativity},
	author = {Tony Veale and Butnariu, Cristina},
	editor = {Simon Colton and Pease, Alison}
}
